Monday, December 19, 2011

Nikki disappeared months ago without a word and then she suddenly returned home. No one knows where she went or what happened while she was gone. Now, she must try to pick up the broken pieces of her life with her father, little brother, and her boyfriend, Jack. But what none of them know is that she is leaving again, and this time she has no choice. Can she say goodbye properly this time or is it too late for those she loves?

Things I Liked:I've been looking forward to this one for a long time. I follow Brodi's blog quite regularly and I really love her humor and fun. Her book is definitely not a laughing-throughout book, but it was still fabulous. I loved Nikki and the way she was coming to recognize all that she did to her family and friends when she left. I thought it was particularly interesting to see the connections between actions and choices and consequences - that's something that a lot of teens (and adults) don't always consider. The romance was just perfect, a sweet combination of passion and caring that makes it more realistic. I just thought it was a such a great story, not crowded with too much action and adventure, but full of slow sweet moments, interactions, and feelings. That's not to say that stuff doesn't happen (boy, does it), but it had more than just action. I really liked the mythos, the way the Persephone myth played into the story and yet was changed. Without ending on a cliffhanger, it manages to make me want to know more about what will happen next and how things will work out. Great debut worth the read (not to mention, you can ogle the cover - simply gorgeous)! Some favorite parts:

We'd pluck the spiky chestnuts, leaving their green outer shells intact, and throw them at the neighbor boys. I always took particular care in aiming for Jack's head. He told me later that he rode his bike by my house on purpose. I asked if him if he liked pain. P 44 of ARC

"Because it's not the supernatural abilities that set mythical characters apart." She leaned forward. "It's the decisions the human characters make, in impossible situations, that have us still talking about them centuries later. Heroes are made by the paths they choose, not the powers they are graced with." p 133 of ARC

Friends don't eat friends' souls. p 223 of ARC

Things I Didn't Like:It has a bit of awkward phrasing here adn there and the ending was something I saw pretty far in advance, but it had plenty lovely writing and twisty turns, so I was unable to put it down from beginning to end. Just what I love in a good mythological retelling - new twists with some of the same basic backbone. Read-alikes:Some other Persephone retellings:Abandon by Meg CabotThe Goddess Test by Aimee CarterRadiant Darkness by Emily Whitman

BOOK CONTENT RATINGS:s-factor: ! a handful, not much though

mrg-factor: X kissing and such like, nothing explicit

v-factor: -> a little bit, nothing gory

Overall rating: *****

AND, lucky for you, I got an extra ARC and thought I'd share the love so you can get your hands on this one (hopefully) a bit early. All you have to do is fill out the form below. I'm offering an extra entry for those who spread the word about this, just provide a link to where you shared (twitter, blog, whatevs). I'll close the contest about January 2nd and ship it out ASAP. (US only, sorry I'm still poor.) Good luck!

Contest closed.

If you buy through my Amazon linkage, I will get a very small percentage